Ello poppets.
So I calmed down (for real this time) and took a couple of months to think things over and make a decision about what direction to take my life in. First things first, I'm going back to school. After really taking a critical eye to my collegiate career, I just honestly didn't do that much. Some of it was from complacency/cockiness, some from ADHD/Anxiety, and the rest from being a kid who had zero frame of reference for what hard work means and the kind of actual dedication that is required to make it in any career. If you were to look at my current resume, you might go "well that's an okay resume." but that's just it. In a professional creative setting, "okay" isn't anywhere close to good enough, you've got to win some awards and network your butt off to just have a shot at a legitimate job.
This knowledge that I could have done a lot better for myself coupled with the fact that there is a dearth of big boy jobs that I'm qualified for in my area (that might have allowed me to chill for a year or two, make some money, and then reexamine things later) is really what drove this decision to go back to school. The second thing to know is that I'm staying creative. I just really can't imagine myself doing anything else, and if that means a whole lot of hard work and growing pains, well I guess that's what's got to happen.
There were a lot of directions I could go in, and initially I was quite scarred from my LA experience, but I took a look at that too and realized I really created 90% of those problems for myself, and just couldn't stop digging my own grave. So, without taking you through the long selection process, my family, friends, and I really whittled things down to two choices/majors/fields of interest:
-- Sequential Art/Animation
-- Screenwriting/Creative Writing
Drawing and Writing weren't the only two things I was/do show aptitude in, but they sure are the most tangible and marketable. Not that I'm incredible at either, hence the more schooling. Well do to my circumstances, and off-the-wall behavior of the past several months, I really only had the wherewithal and persuasive ability to make a serious go at two institutions: SCAD, and LMU.
Now, ironically, these are both schools I had applied to FOREVER ago, and didn't hear from until last minute for different reasons. For now, let's just say I was under the persuasion that LMU was a lost cause and SCAD was my only real option. I'm here in Atlanta to tour SCAD before I am unable to pull out at all (just in case), literally only four days away from having to pay tuition, and who do I get a phone call but from LMU's Director of Graduate Admissions who tells me that she was so moved by my letter of continuing interest that she had a spot opened up for me in the otherwise full Writing and Producing for Television program and that all I had to do was let her know by (this coming) Monday whether or not I wanted to attend.
So now, I am stuck. Both schools present big, expensive opportunities to stay in the field of storytelling, but with wildly different career paths. I honestly can't decide which I'd rather do more. Here's a short comparison, followed by a few more thoughts:
SCAD (Savannah College of Art and Design)
BFA in Sequential Art (or possibly Animation if I level up my foundational art skills enough)
~$150k in total cost
3-3.5 years
Atlanta Campus
LMU (Loyola Marymount University)
MFA in Writing and Producing for Television
~$99k in total cost (with TA opportunities)
3 years
Los Angeles Campus
Thoughts on SCAD: Pricey, and I feel like I didn't earn my acceptance with an admittedly lackluster portfolio, but my advisor did (indirectly) assure me that I was on the more-desirable side of applicants. After touring SCAD Atlanta and my apartment building next door all I can say is "damn". It is pretty awesome, everyone I've met has been really nice, and Midtown in general is pretty great. The obvious downside here is that I'm starting from "scratch" (at in the least in the sense that I'm not exactly going to be better than any of my peers at drawing) and I'm only going to earn a BFA. The flip hand of that is that, if I do things right, and make a lot of good finished and portfolio work, it doesn't matter if I have a BFA, MFA, or I'm a homeless hipster with a drawing tablet. When I've asked others opinions, they said that they haven't heard me talk as much about drawing and that I usually am more focused storytelling in general--BUT, the whole reason I wanted to do SEQA in the first place is that it combined storytelling with a more tangible skill to create a finished product (potentially all on your own). Also, like getting better at anything, it just takes a lot MORE time to produce quality work before you become competent, and after shaking a lot of the rust off over the past 2-3 months, I feel like I know what is in store in my journey to becoming a visual artist. Plus hey, who doesn't want to make webcomics and such?
Thoughts on LMU: The OG dream, to write and produce a television show. I have a lot of friends back in LA, and several going to LMU. I would love to also get that TA experience, and would probably rather teach as an adjunct professor or high school teacher as my day job than do something like say... work at Ralph's or some shitty no-name production company and write when I get home from a miserable day of work. The obvious downside here is that this is focused a bit more on getting prepared for academia, and obviously, I don't exactly have enough experience to be able to get on any kind of tenure track--especially for a teaching field that is almost 100% dominated by published semi-retired professionals, also having an MFA doesn't actually get me any further ahead in my writing career. It could be a great way to get back into writing, experience LA the RIGHT way without crying like a little bitch through it all, and make some serious connections. All while still seeing my friends. I would also be earning an MFA which would at least qualify me to teach in some way--and despite the inherent difficulties involved, I also really enjoy the prospect of teaching, critiquing, and being surrounded by developing storytelling in a professional setting. It would definitely encourage me to keep up my own writing.
Neutral thoughts: I've done some work with my therapist and have really been preparing myself emotionally and mentally for either of these opportunities. For me, it really is split right down the middle, I can see myself succeeding down both paths. What's really got me worried is if I can't keep up the energy and drive to bring not only my A game to my assigned work, but also be constantly developing my own projects and aggressively networking for three years. I've been scheduling myself better, working on my work habits, OCD and anxious tendencies, and will possibly have a prescription for ADHD meds sometime before school starts--but STILL, I am worried that I will either burn out and really be in a bad way or just let lethargy get the best of me.
EDIT: Advice on how to decide? Or perhaps which is the better opportunity?